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'·, / Hollywoo Genr::: FORMULAS , FILMMAKING, ANO THE STUDIO SYSTEM Thomas Schatz The University of Texas at Austin Boston7Massachusetts Burr Ridge, lllinois Dubuque, lowa Madison, Wisconsin New York, New York San Francisco, California St. Louis , Missouri ¡,._ Ú Ú 'O "-· ·· 1-- ' ; "- -::o c., .. '' ;y. '<\ " ''Yoa l. ,/

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Page 1: Hollywood Genres.pdf

'·, /

Hollywoo Genr::: FORMULAS,

FILMMAKING, ANO THE

STUDIO SYSTEM

Thomas Schatz The University of Texas at Austin

• Boston7 Massachusetts Burr Ridge, lllinois Dubuque, lowa Madison, Wisconsin New York, New York San Francisco, California St. Louis , Missouri

/~~

¡,._ . ~P;· ~~. Ú le.~ Ú 'O "-··· 1--' ; "-

Bib ll ote c ::~. ~"~ -::o c.,

.. ::.~ '' ;y. '<\ " ''Yoa l.

,/

Page 2: Hollywood Genres.pdf

i'

raw-Hill A Division o{TheMcGrawHiUCompanies

VOOD GENRES !ion

1t © 1981 by McGraw-Hill, Inc.

; reserved. Printed in the United States of America. Except as permitted ! Copyright Act of 1976, no part of this publication may be reproduced or !d in any form or by any means, or stored in a data base or retrieval 'ithout the prior written permission of the publisher.

nd bound by Book-mart Press, Inc.

18 19 20 21 BKMBKM 9 9 8 7

,f Congress Cataloging in Publication Data homas, 1948. IVOod genres. graphy; p. es index. 'ing-pictures- United States. I. Title i.U6S32 791.43'09794'94 80-25699 ·553623-4

by American-Stratford Graphic Services, Inc. earch by Christine Pollo gn by Lorraine Hohman :ign by Doug Fornuff

While writing this book

l underwent two rather significant passages:

the death of my mother, Jean Murray Schatz,

and the birth of my daughter, Katie.

I would like to dedicate this book to them

and also to Sherry, my wife and fellow passenger.

~

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Preface

The central thesis of this book is that a genre approach provides the most effec­tive means for understanding, analyzing, and appreciating the Hollywood cinema. Taking into account not only the formal and aesthetic aspects of fea tu re filmmak­ing, but various other cultural aspects as well, the genre approach treats movie production as a dynamic process of exchange between the film industry and its au­dience. This process, embodied in the Hollywood studio system, has been sus­tained primarily through genres, those popular narrative formulas like the West­ern, musical, and gangster film, which have dominated the screen arts throughout

Film critics and historians ha ve, of course, recognized the pervasive and popular this century.

nature of th ese fo rmulas, but genre study generally has been overshadowed by more "literary" critica! approaches-particularly those treating film "authorship" (usually in terms of the director) and those treating movies as individual, isolated texts. Such critica! efforts have been necessary and laudable, but the more we come to understand commercial filmmaking, the more severely limited they seem · to be. Movies are not produced in creative or cultural isolation, nor are they con­sumed that way. Individual movies may affect each one of us powerfully and somewhat differently, but essentially they are all generated by a collective produc­tion system which honors certain narrative traditions (or conventions) in designing for a mass market. As such, we cannot examine individual films without first es­tablishing a critica! and theoretical framework that recognizes the cinema's pro­duction-consumption process as well as the basic conventions of feature film-

making. A genre approach provides this framework, because (1) it assumes that film-making is a commercial art, and hence that its creators rely on preven formulas to

vi i

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r viii PREFACE

economize and systematize production; {2) it recognizes the cinema's close with its audience, whose response to individual films has affected the gradual opment of story formulas and standard production practices; {3) it treats the ema as primarily a narralive (storytelling) medium, one whose familiar stories vol ve drama tic conflicts, which are themselves based u pon ongoing cultural and {4) it establishes a context in which cinematic arlistry is evaluated in terms our filmmakers' capacity to re-invent established formal and narrative conven­tions.

The focus of my book is the Hollywood studio system's "classic era," the period roughly from 1930 to 1960. The continuance, since then, of genre production, both in filmmaking and in network television, reaffirms the need for a systematic, in­depth inquiry into the nature and function of that production. This book repre­sents an effort to !ay the historical and theoretical groundwork for genre study in the American screen arts, encompassing not only literary and filmic concerns, but cultural, socioeconomic, industrial, political, and even anthropological concerns as well.

Hollywood Genres is divided into two parts. Part One is primarily theoretical, concerned in general terms with the essential characteristics and the cultural role of genre filmmaking. This section does not examine any individual genres or genre films, but instead looks at the very concept of what might be termed "genre­ness"- that is, those formal and narrative features shared by all genres and their relationship to the culture at large.

Part Two is composed of six chapters, each of which examines a dominant Hol­lywood genre: the Western, gangster, hardboiled detective, screwball comedy, musical, and family melodrama. Each chapter is divided into two sections: an his­torical survey of the genre and a critica! analysis of sorne of its key films . The Western survey is complemented by an analysis of the genre's evolution; it exam­ines four Westerns directed by John Ford in consecutive decades. The gangster chapter incorporales an essay on the impact of the Production Code (a means of industry-based censorship). The hardboiled detective survey is preceded by an analysis of a certain style {film nair) and a single film (Cilizen Kane) that influenced the genre's development. The screwball comedy chapter contains an essay on the collaborative efforts of director Frank Capra and screenwriter Robert Riskin. The musical survey leads directly into an exploration of the genre's "Golden Age" under producer Arthur Freed at M-G-M. And the family melodrama chapter is rounded out with an analysis of three films by the genre's consummate stylist, Douglas Sirk.

These six formulas obviously represent only a limited number of Hollywood genres. But they do include what I believe are the most significant of Hollywood's popular forms. They also provide a convenient historical "fit." For by surveying these genres within the same context, I have been able to develop a critical-histori-

PREFACE ix

of Hollywood's classic era . The gangster study concentrates on the 19305, the screwball comedy on the mid-to-late 1930s, the hardboiled

on the 1940s, the musical on the late 1940s and the early 1950s, the fam­on the mid-to-late 1950s, and the chapter on the W estern spans the

era. risk of sounding like sorne gushing recipient at an Academy Awards I would like to recognize and thank various individuals who contributed,

or indirectly, to the writing of this book. interes t in the American cinema and in genre study began- thanks to my

there-Rick (Charles F.) Altman , Franklin Miller, Dudley Andrew, Richard MacCann, and Sarn 13ecker, while l was at the University of Iowa. I an1 also

to my feUow graduate students, especially to Jane Feuer, ]oe Heurnann, Allen, Michael 13udd, Phi\ Rosen, and 13ob Vasilak. Sorne of my earliest

also contributed to this book, although none of us realized it at the I am particularly grateful to James 13urtchaell , c.s.c., and Carvel Collins of the

of Notre Dame, and to ]une Levine and Lee Lemon of the University of

ebraska . It wasn' t until I began teaching at the University of Texas that the present book began to take shape, and l am grateful to 13ob Davis and my other colleagues

being so supportive during the past few years. I also arn indebted to all of my at Texas, particularly those graduate students who, whether as students,

editors, or friends, contributed to this project. Special thanks to Greg 13eal, Rodowick, Mike Selig, Karol HoeHner, Louis 13\ack, Jackie 13yars, Ed Lowry,

Stephanie Samuel, and David 13rown for their advice and encouragement. Finally, 1 would like to thank my editors and readers at McGraw-Hill, Inc. who

brought this project to fruition. My acquiring editor, Richard Garretson, and my production editor, Marilyn Miller, were of inestimable assistance in supervising the revisions of the text and translating my scholarly language into, what I hope, is readable prose. McGraw-Hill, Inc. also provided a number of excellent readers from my field who reviewed the manuscript and oHered constructive criticism,

particularly ]ohn Cawelti, Frank McConnell, and Rick Altman. A word about the sti\ls: I had hoped initially that the illustrations in this book

would be composed only of frame enlargements-that is, images "lifted" frotn actual film footage- rather than production sti\ls which generally are not taken from the movie catnera' s perspective. Due to various problems regarding the q®li<y of ¡,.me en\O>gemen< " produdlon , d \he \e"<hon"wope<oh'" ollilude of most studios, I have had to settle for production stills in most instances. All of the stills selected, however, do serve to i\lmninate the text and should help refresh

the reader' s recoUection of the films in question. Austin August 1980

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~ 1

The en tus ofthe

System

Whenever a motian picture becomes a work of art it is unquestionably due to men. But the moving pictures hove been born and bred not of men but of corporations. Corporations hove set up the easels, bought the pigments, arranged the views, and hired the potential artists. Until the artists emerge, at least, the corporation is bigger than the sum of its parts. Somehow, although our poets hove not yet defined it for us, a corporation /íves a life and finds a fate outside the /íves and fates of its human constituents.

---fortune magazine, December 1932 1

Paradoxical/y, the supporters of the politique des auteurs • admire the American cinema, where the restrictions of production are heavier than anywhere else. lt is also true that it is the cauntry where the greatest technical possibi/íties are offered to the director. But the one does not cancel out the other. 1 do, however, admit that freedom is greater in Hol­lywood than it is said to be, as long as one knows how to detect its manifestations, and 1 wi/1 go so far as to soy that the tradition of genres is a base of operations for creative freedom. The American cinema is a c/assical art, but why not then admire in it what is most admirable, i.e.

not only the talent of this or that filmmaker, but the genius of the sys­tem.

-André Bazin2

·--------• The "auteur policy," which held that certain film directors should be considered the "authors" of their films.

3

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( 4 HOllYWOOD GEN RES

~e sludio syslem

Franc;ois Truffaut, French critic turned filmmaker, recently suggested that "when a film achieves a certain success, it becomes a sociological event, and the question of its quality becomes secondary"

3 (Truffaut, 1972). The success of a film mayor may

not depend u pon its artistic quality---and this is a bone of critica! contention which forever will separa te elitists like John Simon from populists like Pauline Kael. But in the final analysis any film's quality, itself based upon subjective critica] con­sensus, is incidental to the fact of its social and economic impact. Truffaut's obser­vation would seem to coincide, interestingly enough, with the U.S. Supreme Court's 1915 decision that "the exhibition of motion pictures is a business pure and simple, originated and conducted for profit." Both Truffaut and the Supreme Court have recognized a fundamental tenet of commercial filmmaking: producers may not know much about art, but they know what sells and how to systematically deliver more of the same. If what the producer delivers happens to be evaluated critically as art, so much the better.

Essentially, the function of the Hollywood production companies always has been to create what Truffaut termed sociological events. In their continua! efforts to reach as massive an audience as possible, early filmmakers investigated are as of potential audience appeal and, at the same time, standardized those areas whose appeal already had been verified by audience response. In the gradual develop­ment of the business of movie production, experimentation steadily gave way to standardization as a matter of fundamental economics. Between 1915 and 1930 the studios had standardized, hence economized, virtually every aspect of film pro­duction4 (Balio, 1976). Because of this heavy regimentation, the studios of Holly­wood's "classic" era (roughly 1930 to 1960) have been referred toas factary produc­tion systems. The analogy is not without basis in actual industry practice: the "studio system" functioned to mass produce and mass distribute movies. This is considerably different from the "New Hollywood," where the studios function primarily as distribution companies-that is, they distribute films which, for the most part, are produced independently.

Unti! the 'Sos, the majar studios (MGM, Twentieth Century-Fox, Warner Broth­ers, Paramount, RKO) not only made motion pictures, but they also leased them through their own distribution companies to theaters which they themselves con­trolled. Although the "majors"-along with significant "minors" like Columbia, Universal-Internationai, Republic, and Monogram-never controlled more than one sixth of all movie theaters in the United States, they did control most of the important "first-run" houses. In the mid-'40s, when Hollywood's audience was at its peak, the five majors owned or controlled the operations of 126 of the 163

THE GENIUS OF THE SYSTEM 5

theaters in the nation's twenty-five largest cities. Not only did the audi­attending these theaters provide the bulk of revenue for the studios, but they

determined the general trends of studio production and cinematic expression. U .S. Supreme Court dismantled this monopolistic "vertical structure" in 1948, ten years of court battles with Paramount. This was one of the key factors, with the advent of television and other cultural developments, in the even-

"death" of the studio system. By this time, however, Hollywood had read the of its popular audience in developing an engaging and profitable means of

cinematic expression-the conventions of feature filmmaking were established.

Thus the artist and the industrialist were cast into a necessary and highly pro­ductive relationshi~ach one struggling with but also depending upon the other for the success of their commercial art. While filmmakers learned to adapt their own and their audience's narrative impulse to the demands of the medium, busi­nessmen learned to exploit the medium's capacity for widespread dissemination and consumption. While filmmakers advanced narrative traditions developed in drama and literature, producers and exhibitors advanced the commercial potential anticipated by previous forms of mass entertainment. So by the time the movie in­dustry had standardized the feature-length narrative film by the late 'teens, the medium's mixed heritage was fairly obvious. The movies had their roots in both classic literature and bestselling pulp romances, in legitimate theater as well as vaudeville and music halls, in traditions of both "serious art" and American "pop­ular entertainment."5

The contemporary mass audience, ultimately, is in good part responsible for the development of the studio system-the same audience whose leisure time and spending money became, in social historian Arnold Hauser's words, "a decisive factor in the history of art"6 (Hauser, 1951, p. 250). By its attraction to the cinema, this audience encouraged mass distribution of movies, as well as an adherence to filmmaking conventions. Feature filmmaking, like most mass media production, is an expensive enterprise. Those who invest their capital, from the majar studio to the struggling independent, are in a curious bind: on the one hand, their product must be sufficiently inventive to attract attention and satisfy the audience's de­manci for novelty, and on the other hand, they must protect their initial investment by relying to sorne extent upon established conventions that have been proven through previous exposure and repetition.

We should note here that in film production-and in virtually any popular art form-a successful product is bound up in convention because its success inspires repetition. The built-in "feedback" circuits of the Hollywood system ensured this repetition of successful stories and techniques, because the studios' production­distribution-exhibition system enabled filmmakers to gauge their work against au­dience response. It is as if with each commercial effort, the studios suggested an­other variation on cinematic conventions, and the audience indicated whether the inventive variations would themselves be conventionalized through their repeated usage.

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~ 6 HOLLYWOOD GENRES

We should also note that this is a reciproca! relationship between artist and audi­ence. The filmmaker's inventive impulse is tempered by his or her practica! recog­nition of certain conventions and audience expectations; the audience demands creativity or variation but only within the context of a familiar narrative experi­ence. As with any such experience it is difficult for either artist or audience to spec­ify precisely what elements of an artistic event they are responding to. Conse­quently, filmic conventions have been refined through considerable variation and repetition. In this context, it is important to remember that roughly 400 to 700 movies were released per year during Hollywood's classic era, and that the studios depended increasingly upon established story formulas and techniques. Thus any theory of Hollywood filmmaking must take into account this essential process of production, feedback, and conventionalization.

The studio system's role in the evolution of narrative filmmaking was consider­able, in terms of its national and international popularity and, more importantly, in its systematic honing of filmic expression into effective narrative conventions. The international film market fluctuated throughout the studio era due to the De­pression and the war, but conservative estimates indica te that Hollywood products occupied anywhere from 70 to 90 percent of the available screen time in most Eu­ropean and Latín American countries. In addition, the Motion Picture Association of America's "classification of subject matter" for the year 1950 indicates that over 60 percent of al! Hollywood productions that year were either Westerns (27o/o), crime/detective films (20%), romantic comedies (11%), or musicals (4%), and that roughly 90 percent fell into sorne preestablished classification-mystery/spy, war, etc? (Sterling and Haight, 1978).

The implications of these data are twofold. First, Hollywood's domination of not only national but international production and distribution suggests that its influ­ence extended well beyond the United States. Second, and even more signifi­cantly, the Hollywood imprint generally involved not only isolated production techniques and narrative devices, but established story types or "genres" like the Western or the musical. And these genres have in turn traveled well-think of what Italy's "spaghetti Westerns," Japan's samurai films, or the French New Wave's hardboiled detective films owe to genres developed by the Hollywood studio system.

¡(e genre film and !he genre director

Simply stated, a genre film-whether a Western ora musical, a screwball comedy or a gangster film-involves familiar, essentially cine-dimensional characters act­ing out a predictable story pattern within a familiar setting. During the reign of the studio system, genre films comprised the vast majority of the most popular and

THE GENIUS OF THE SYSTEM 7

productions, and this trend has continued even after its death. In con­mre films tended to attract greater critica! attention during the studio

John Ford's The Grapes of Wrath , Charlie Chaplin's Monsieur Ver­Wilder's The Los! Weekend, and Jean Renoir's Diary of a Chambermaid.

and other non-genre films generally traced the personal and psychologi­;,pment of a "central character" or protagonist. The central characters are

1i.r types whom we've seen befo re in movies (like the gangster, the music esterner). Rather, they are unique individuals whom we relate to less in

previous filmic experience than in terms of our own "real-world" experi­plot in non-genre films does not progress through conventional con­

a predictable resolution (as with the gangster dead in the gutter, the musical show). Instead it develops a linear plot in which the various

are linked in a chronological chain and organized by the central character's --~reptual viewpoint. The plot resolution generally occurs when the signifi­

the protagonist's experiences--of the "plot line"-becomes apparent to

character or to the audience, or to both. films representa limited portion of Hollywood's productions, andas expect, many were directed by foreign-born filmmakers like Wilder and

But equally significant are those foreign directors who adapted so effec-. to Hollywood's genre-based system, as shown, for example, in Fritz Lang's

and crime films, Ernst Lubitsch's musicals and romantic comedies, and

Sirk's and Max Ophuls' social melodramas. , the dependence of certain premiere American directors upon estab-

film genres is equally significant and just as often overlooked. Whether we Griffith's melodramas, Keaton's slapstick comedy, Ford's Westerns, or

Minneui's musicals, we are treating Hollywood directors whose reputations as art­ists, as creative filmmakers, are based upon their work within popular genres. As the studio era recedes into American film history, it becomes increasingly evident that most of the recognized American auteur directors did their most expressive

and significant work within highly conventionalized forros.

lhe auteur· policy

E ven with this reservation, we certainly cannot dismiss the "auteur policy," the single most productive concept in film study over the past quarter century, al­though we should be aware of its limitations as well as its assets.

8

The notion of directoria! authorship---that the director is the controlling creative force and hence potentiall y the "author" of his films--is a necessary and logical critica! approach. Anyone who discussed "the Lubitsch touch" in the '30s or anticipated the next "Hitchcock thriller" in the '40s was, in fact, practicing this critica! approach.

Originally, the auteur approach was formalized by a group of critics--among them Fran<;ois Truffaut, Eric Rohmer, and Jean-Luc Godard-writing for the

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8 HOLLYWOOD GEN RES

French film journal Cahiers du Cinema. Working throughout the 1950s under editor André Bazin, the Cahiers critics fashioned the "auleur policy" (la politique des au/eurs) asan alternative to content-oriented, plot-theme analyses of movies. Significantly, the au/eur policy was developed not to treat foreign filmmakers who had a great deal of control over their productions. Rather, the policy was designed to recon­sider those Hollywood directors who, despite the constraints of the studio system, were able to instill a personal style into their work.

In order to understand the artistry of commercial filmmaking, argued the auleur critics, we must complement the dominant critica! concern for a film's "subject matter" with more subtle consideration of visual style, camerawork, editing, and th~ various other factors which make up the director's "narrative voice." Alffed Hitchcock once said that he is "less interested in stories than in the manner of telling them"9 (Sadoul, 1972, p. 117). Auteur analysis is, in effect, a formalized criti­ca! response to this particular conception of filmmaking.

As the auteur policy was refined and eventually introduced to English and American critics by Andrew Sarris and others, the Hollywood film industry un­derwent a steady revaluation. The reputations of directors like Hitchcock and Minnelli, who had been dismissed by many American critics beca use they worked in such lowbrow forms, were substantially reconsidered. In addition, a number of directors, who somehow had escaped the attention of American critics (Howard Hawks is a prime example), now were recognized as major filmmakers, along with many other exceptional stylists who had directed low-budget "B" productions (Sam Fuller, Anthony Mann, and others). Even the esteem of a widely heralded director like John Ford, whose popular and critica! reputation had long been es­tablished, underwent a critica! revaluation that reflected a basic reconsideration of Hollywood filmmaking. Auteur critics argued persuasively that Ford's genre films-war movies like They Were Expendable and Westerns like The Searchers and The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance-demonstrated a stylistic richness and thematic ambiguity that made them artistically superior to the calculated artistry and social consciousness of "serious" Ford films like The Informer and The Grapes of Wrath .

Experience had taught the auteur critics that, because of the popular and indus­trial nature of commercial filmmaking, the serious film artist often comes in through the back door. Too often "serious social drama" in the cinema is less seri­ous, less genuinely social, and certainly less dramatic than the supposed "escapist entertainment" fare of a Ford Western or a Minnelli musical or a Hitchcock thriller. Auteur critics, in acknowledging the popular and industrial demands placed upon filmmakers, rejected the artificial distinctions between art and enter­tainment, and thus they signaled a substantial evolution in the way people-film­makers, viewers, and critics alike-thought about movies.

In retrospect, it seems quite logical that auteur and genre criticism would domi­nate Hollywood film study. These two critica! methods do complement and coun­terbalance one another in that genre criticism treats established cinematic forms,

. whereas auteur criticism celebrates certain filmmakers who worked effectively ) within those forms. Both approaches reflect an increased critica! sensitivity to the

THE GENIUS OF THE SYSTEM 9

for conventionalization in commercial filmmaking . In fact the auteur ap­asserting a director's consistency of form and expression, effectively

an au/eur into a virtual genre unto himself, into a system of conventions his work. And further, the director's consistency, like the genre's, is

economic and material demands of the medium and to his popularity audience. As John Ford, who himself considered film directing "al­

of work," once suggested: "For a director there are commercial rules necessary to obey. In our profession, an artistic failure is nothing; a corn­failure is a sentence. The secret is to make films that please the public and

the director to reveal his personality"10

(Sadoul, 1972, p. 89). the essential attributes of auleur analysis is its structural approach: lts

is to uncover the "deep structure" (the directoria\ personality) in order to and evaluate the "surface structure" (his or her movies) . The socioeco-

imperatives of Hollywood filmmaking, however, indicate that there are a of deep structures-industrial, political, technical, stylistic, narrative, and

inform the production process. Further, when we considera director _ within an established genre we are faced with another, even "deeper,"

than that of the director's personality. The genre's preestablished cul-significance in effect determines the range and substance of any one direc-

expressive treatment of that genre. hat one director's treatment is more effective than another's motivates the film

who examines the filmrnaker's manipulation and variation of formal, narra­and thematic conventions. Generally, and especially regarding a director

·worKing within a well-developed genre, the knowledgeable critic must distinguish between the director's and the genre's contribution to a film's expressive quality . In examining Sam Peckinpah's The Wild Bunch, for example, one must be familiar with the history of the Western and with Peckinpah's career in order to determine

how he has reinvented the genre's conventions. Analyzing a genre director's work, which has grown along with a genre, repre-

sents an even more difficult critica! challenge. Consider John Ford, who began di­recting silent, two-reel Westerns in 1917 and continued to produce the most popu­lar and significant films within the genre until the early 1960s. And what of a director like Alfred Hitchcock, who in a sense "invented" the psychological thriller and who completely dominated that genre from the late 1920s through the 1960s? We will discuss these issues in later chapters, but for now they can stand as open questions that indicate the complexity involved in criticizing Hollywood

genre filrns. The studio production system itself, designed for the variations-on-a-theme ap-proach characteristic of genre filmmaking, is at the very heart of this critica! di­lemma. Because of the practica! budgetary problems of set design, scriptwriting, and so forth, the studios encouraged the development of film genres. Obviously, costs could be minimized by repeating successful formulas. Box-office returns alone provided sufficient criteria for continued genre production; the studios clearly need not understand why certain narratives appealed to viewers. They only

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lO HOllYWOOD GENRES

required assurance that the appeal indeed existed and could be · exploited cially. Thus, many aspects of studio production were refined to accommodate genre filmmaking: the "stables" of writers and technical crews whose work was limited to certain types of films; the studio sets and sound stages designed for spe­cific genres; even the "star system," which capitalized upon the familiar, easi ly ca­tegorized qualities of individual performers. (Try to imagine, for instance, a pas­sionate kiss between John Wayne and Ginger Rogers. It just doesn't work, essentialJy because of the close connections between a star's screen persona and his or her status as a generic convention.)

Genre @nd rrotsrl!'cdhre «:onven*ions

As this example indicates, any genre's narra/ive con/ex/ imbues its conventions with meaning. This meaning in turn determines their use in individual films. In general, the commercial cinema is identifiabie by formal and narrative elements common to virtualJy alJ its products: the Hollywood movie is a story of a certain length fo­cusing upon a protagonist (a hero, a~c;:.entraJ character); and it involves certain standards of production, a style of nnvisible") edi ting, the use of musical score, and so on. The genre film, however, i~' ldentified not only by its use of these gen­eral filmic devices to create an imaginary world; it is also significant that this worJd is predetermined and essentialJy intact. The narrative components of a non-genre film-the characters, setting, plot, techniques, etc.-assume their significance as they are integrated into the individual film itself. In a genre film, however, these components have prior significance as elements of sorne generic formula, and the viewer's negotiation of a genre film thus involves weighing the film's variations against the genre's preordained, va1ue-1aden narrative system.

An example of this process may be seen in a conventional gunfight in a Western film. Everything-from the characters ' dress, demeanor, and weapons to their standing in the dirt street of an American frontier community-assumes a signifi­cance beyond the Eilm's immediate narrative concerns. This significance is based on the viewer's familiarity with the "world" of the genre itself rather than on his or her own world. As Robert Warshow observed in his analysis of the gangster genre, "it is only in the ultimate sense that the type appeals to the audience's experience of reality; much more immediately, it appeals to the previous experience of the type itsel f; it creates its own field of reference"u (Warshow, 1962, p. 130). It is not their mere repetition which endows generic elements with a prior significance, but their repetition within a conventionalized formal, narrative, and thematic context. If it is initialJy a popular success, a film story is reworked in later movies and re­peated until it reaches its equilibrium profile-until it becomes a spatiaJ, sequen­tia!, and thematic pattern of familiar actions and relationships. Such a repetition is generated by the interaction of the studios and the mass audience, and it will be

ti

THE GEN IU S OF TH E SYSTEM · 11

long as it satisfies the needs and expectations of the audience and re­viable for the studios.

as a :socia! force

familiarity with a genre is the result of a cumulalive process, of course. of a Western or musical actually might be more difficult and de­

the viewing of a non-genre film, due to the peculiar logic and narra­Wt!nuuns of the genre. With repeated viewings, however, the genre's nar­

comes into focus and the viewer's expeclalions take shape. And when that the generic pattern involves not only narrative elements (charac­

setting) but thematic issues as well, the genre's socializing influence be-apparent.

in examining film genres, these popular narra ti ves whose plots, char­and themes are refined through usage in a mass medium, we are consid­

a forro of artistic expression which involves the audience more directly than :raditional art forro had ever done before. There are earlier forros that antici­

this development, especially performative arts such as Greek or Renaissance However, not until the invention of the printing press and then the popu­

of dime novels, pulp literature, and Beadle books (named for their pub­, Erastus Beadle) did the social and economic implications of popular narra-formulas begin to take shape. Henry Nash Smith considered these

in his evocative study of America's "Western myth," entitled The Land. Smith is especially interested in the creative posture assumed by indi­pulp writers who produced and reproduced popular Western tales for an

eager, impressionable audience. Smith's fundamental thesis is that these authors participated, with their publishers and audience, in the creative celebration of the values and ideals associated with westward expansion, thereby engendering and sustaining the Western myth. He contends that the pulp writer is not panderiflg to his market by lowering himself to the leve! of the mass audience, but rather that he or she is cooperating with it in formulating and reinforcing collective values and ideals. "Fiction produced under these circumstances virtually takes on the charac­ter of automatic writing," Smith suggests . "Such work tends to become an objecti­fied mass dream, like the moving pictures, soap operas, or comic books that are the present-day equivalents of the Beadle stories. The individual writer abandons his own personality and identifies himself with his readers"12 (Smith, 1950, p. 91) .

There have, of course, been pulp novelists like James Fenimore Cooper and Zane Grey, just as there have been genre directors like John Ford and Sam Peck­inpah, who used exceptional formal and expressive artistry in Western storytelling and whose writing seems anything but automatic. In underscoring the relationship of pu~p Western novels toa mass audience and hence to American folklore, how-

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12 HOLLYWOOD GENRES

ever, Smith's study adds an important dimension to our discussion. He that these novels were written not only for the mass audience, but by them as wel!. Produced by depersonalized representatives of the collective, anonymous public and functioning to celebrate basic beliefs and values, their formulas might be re­garded not only as popular or even elite art but also as cultural ritual-as a form of collective expression seemingly obsolete in an age of mass technology and a genu­inely "silent majority."

This view of the nature and function of popular narrative artistry has been ex­tended, predictably enough, into the realm of commercial filmmaking, where many of the same principies apply. In fact, André Bazin's "La politigue des au­teurs" essay was conceived as a warning to auteur critics that they look at the many other aspects of filmmaking besides directing that contribute to the authorship of any individual movie. Bazin suggests:

What makes Hollywood so much better than anything else in the world is not only the quality of certain directors, but also the vitality and, in a certain sense, the excellence of a tradition. Hollywood' s superiority is only incidentally technical; it lies much more in what one might call the American cinematic genius, something which should be analyzed, then defined, by a sociological approach to its produc­tion. The American cinema has been able, in an extraordinarily competent way, to show American society justas it wanted to see itself13 (1968, pp. 142-143)

The basis for this viewpoint is the leve! of active bu! indirect audience participation in the formulation of any popular commercial form. And that participation is itself a function of the studio system's repeating and handing clown, with slight variation, those stories that the audience has isolated through its collective response.

lt should be mentioned that because of the narrow range of distribution and the limited audience feedback involved in the nineteenth century, the pulp author's degree of cooperation with his or her audience was quite different from that of the Hollywood filmmaker. * Furthermore, the dime pulp or bestselling novel is the product of an individual consciousness and is communicated through a personal medium of expression. The Hollywood genre film, conversely, is both produced and consumed collectively. We are dealing here with the studio system over a pe­riod of sustained and widespread popular success, from the early years of the sound film through the gradual relinguishing, after sorne four decades, of the stu­dios and their production system to the commercial television industry. These are the years befare American filmmakers began to appeal, as they have tended to more recently, to a specialized market or age group. The Hollywood studios and the genre film had their heyday simultaneously-and this is no coincidence­when films were seen as mass entertainment by a general public who regularly (one might even say religiously) went "to the movies" in numbers peaking in the mid- to late-40's at 90 million viewers per week.

• Smith mentions this fact.

THE GENIUS OF THE SYSTEM 13

genre filmmaking as a form of collective cultural expression, acknowledge that certain commercial and technological as­

gualify this approach. Dwight MacDonald in his "Theory of posits "the essential guality of Mass, as against High or Folk, Cul­~factured for mass consumption by technicians employed by the

is not an expression of the individual artist or the common people (MacDonald, in Rosenberg and White, 1964). From this viewpoint,

is more a technician than an individual artist. Nevertheless, s observations do encourage us to avoid any simplistic association of

filmmaking with either elite or folk expression. must temper our view of the cinematic uuteur by acknowledging the

production system in which he or she works, so too must we tem­of the genre film as a kind of secular, contemporary cultural ritual. commercial feedback system rarely affords the audience any direct creative input. Rather it allows it to affect future variations by voic­approval or disapproval of a current film. Such a response has a cu-

effect, first isolating and then progressively refining a film story into a fa­tlarrative pattern. As Robert Warshow observes in his study of the gangster "For such a type to be successful means that its conventions have imposed

upon the general consciousness and become accepted vehicles of a set of attitudes and a particular aesthetic effect. One goes to any individ-

of the type with very definite expectations, and originality is accepted in the degree that it intensified the expected experience without fundamen-

altering it"15 (Warshow, 1962, p. 130). a limited sense, any genre film is the original creation of an individual writer

but the nature and range of that originality are determined by the con­and expectations involved in the genre filmmaking process. Thus, any

analysis of that originality must be based firmly on an understanding of the genre and the production system in which any individual genre film is

Ultimately, we need to complement elitist critica! attitudes with a , more culturally and industrially responsive approach. In a certain sense,

approach could be dismissed as simply a formulation of a populist " low art" to offset elitist "high art" biases in film study. 1 hope, however, that the value

of the ideas developed in this book will be realized in their application, and not in the context of critica! debate. Whatever one's objections to auteurism, the fact re­mains that clase analysis of certain directors' movies, along with detailed study of their directing methods, does validate the auteur policy as something more than merely a critica! bias-it does reveal some fundamental truth about filmmaking and film art. So too should a genre approach, when applied sensibly and with ca re, reveal sorne essential truths about commercial filmmaking that will enrich our un-

derstanding and appreciation of cinematic art.

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'\

Film l3enres and the

enre Film

1 real/y want to go back to film schoo/ . . .. Or maybe i'i/ get m y masters in anthropoiogy. That's what movies are about anyway. Cultural im­prints.

-Writer-director George .Lucas, discussing Star Wars 1

- ·----- ~-Thus far, we ha ve been considering those qualities of Hollywood filmmaking which determine its status as a commercial art fonn. Our consideration of those qualities led us to the hypothesis that popular cinematic story for­mula5--{)r film genres--express the social and aesthetic sensibilities not only of Hollywood filmmakers but of the mass audience as well.

In many ways, this view of contemporary commercial art resists the elitist critica] assumption that the artwork carries an asocial, terminal value-that the artwork is an end in itself, somehow disengaged from the mundane trap­pings of its initial sociocultural environment. The academic or scholarly con­text in which we generally are exposed to the high arts tends to support this bias, simply because we do study traditional artworks with little concern for the social imperatives involved in their creation. We presume that aesthetic objects do in fact "transcend" the culture in which they were produced, pri­marily because of their significance for us as members of a modern techno­cratic society. Our appreciation of Homer's epic poetry, Shakespeare's drama, or Dickens' novels is only marginally reiated, if at all, to the traditions of oral history, of the Elizabethan popular theater, or of the serialized pulp romances in which those works participated. The historical "gatekeeping" 14

FILM GEN RE AND THE GENRE FILM 15

tradition has singled out great works of art for posterity, and !ess sensitive to their sociological qualities than to their formal

We should avoid, however, assuming that we can study e products of our own culture from a similar critica! and historical

Robin Wood, in an essay entitled "Ideology, Genre, Auteur," ex­about these critica! oversights in genre study:

work that has been done so far on genres has tended to take the various as "given" and discrete, and seeks to explicate them, define them in terms

etc.; what we need to ask, if genre theory is ever to be productive, is less Why? We are so used to the genres that the peculiarity of the phe­

itself has been too little noted.2 (Wood, 1977, p. 47)

suggests, genre study has tended to disengage the genre from the condi­production and to treat it as an isolated, autonomous system of con-

a result, genre study tends to give only marginal attention to the role and the production system in formulating conventions and partici­

their evolutionary development. study may be more "productive" if we complement the narrow critica! traditional genre analysis with a broader sociocultural perspective. Thus, considera genre film not only as sorne filmmaker's artistic expression, but

as the cooperation between artists and audience in celebrating their collec-and ideals. In fact, many qualities traditionally viewed as artistic short­

psychologically static hero, for instance, or the predictability of the a significantly different value when examined as components of a

ritualistic narrative system. If indeed we are to explain the why of Holly­genres, we must look to their shared social function and to their formal con­

. Once we examine these shared features, we then can address a particular and its films.

~en re as system

Perhaps we should begin by noting a basic distinction between film genre study and its predecessor, literary genre study. In the study of literature, generic catego­ries have been virtually imposed on works of fiction (or poetry or drama), repre­senting the efforts of critics or historians to organize the subject matter according to their own subjective criteria. Literary analysts thus have tended to treat their subject in terms that may be irrelevant to those who produce and consume them. Not so with the commercial cinema, however. Because of the nature of film pro-

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16 HOLLYWOOD GENRES

duction and consumption, identifying film genres scarcely involves the sub · interpretive effort that it does in literature. Film genres are not organized or covered by analysts but are the result of the material conditions of filmmaking itself, whereby popular stories are varied and repeated as long as satisfy audience demand and turn a profit for the studios.

The significance of this distinction is twofold. First, it indica tes that a film genre is a "privileged" cinematic story form- that is, only a limited number of · stories have been refined into formulas because of their unique social and/or thetic qualities. Second, as the product of audience and studio interaction, a film genre gradually impresses itself upon the culture until it becomes a familiar, rrieaningful system that can be named as such. Viewers, filmmakers, and critics know what it means to cal! this film a Western or that one a musical, and this knowledge is based on interaction with the medium itself-it is not the result of sorne arbitrary critica! or historical organization.

To identify a popular cinematic story formula, then, is to recognize its status as a coherent, value-laden narrative system. lts significance is immediately evident to those who produce and consume it. Through repeated exposure to individual genre films we come to recognize certain types of characters, locales, and events. In effect, we come to understand the system and its significance . We steadily accu­mulate a kind of narrative-cinematic gesta!! or "mind set" that is a structured men­tal image of the genre's typical activities and attitudes. Thus al! of our experiences with Western films give us an immediate notion, a complete impression, of a cer­tain type of behavioral and attitudinal system.

Because it is essentially a narrative system, a film genre can be examined in terms of its fundamental structural components: plot, character, setting, thematics, style, and so on. We should be careful, though, to maintain a distinction between the film gen re and the gen re film. Whereas the genre exists as a sort of tacit "contract" between filmmakers and audience, the genre film is an actual event that honors such a contract. To discuss the Western genre is to address neither a single West­ern film nor even al! Westerns, but rather that system of conventions which iden­tifies Western films as such.

There is a sense, then, in which a film genre is both a static anda dynamic system. On the one hand, it is a familiar formula of interrelated narrative and cinematic components that serves to continually reexamine sorne basic cultural conflict: one could argue, for example, that al! Westerns confront the same fundamental issues (the taming of the frontier, the celebration of the hero's rugged individualism, the hero's conflicts with the frontier community, etc.) in elaborating America's foun­dation ritual and that slight formal variations do not alter those static thematic characteristics. On the other hand, changes in cultural attitudes, new influential genre films, the economics of the industry, and so forth, continually refine any film genre. As such, its nature is continually evolving. For example, the evolution of Western heroes from agents of law and order to renegade outlaws or professional killers reflects a genuine change in the genre. One could even argue that the term "Western" means something different toda y from what it did two or three decades ago.

4 ·~ .,_-l ' \. ~ \

are rnost aware cf a generic "centrad" when it is violated. The violation rnay

involve casting an established perforrner "against type," as when musical star Dick Powell portvayed prívate eye Philip Marlowe in Murder M y Sweet ( even the title was changed frorn farewell My l.cvely so that audiences wouldn't rnistalce the frlrn for a musical). Or the violaticn rnay simply be a matter of a vehicle (as a carona Western set) frorn one genre turning up on the sef of another. (Wisconsin Center for Film and Theoter

Research); (Private Collection) 17

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18 HOllYWOOD GEN RES

Thus genre experience, like all human experience, is organized according certain fundamental perceptual processes. As we repeatedly undergo the type of experience we develop expectations which, as they are continually forced, tend to harden into "rules." The clearest example of this process in culture is in its games. A game is a system of immutable rules (three strikes baseball) and components determining tl)e nature of play. Yet no two games in sport are alike, and a theoretically infinite number of variations can be within the "arena" that the rules provide. Similarly, certain styles of traditional popular music involve a variations-on-a-theme approach both within and individual pieces. In folk imd blues traditions, for example, most compositions generated from a very few chord progressions.

The analogies between film genres and other cultural systems are virtually less. What such examples seem to highlight is the dual nature of any "species" (or "genus," the root for the word genre), that is, it can be identified either by its rules, components, and function (by its static deep structure) or conversely by the indi­vidual members which comprise the species (by its dynamic surface structure).

Think of a Western movie, ora musical, ora gangster film. Probab!y yot.i won't think of any individual vVestern or musical or gangster film, but rather of a vague! y defined amalgam of actions and attitudes, of characters and locales. For as one sees more genre Eilms, one tends to negotiate the genre less by its individual films than by its deep structure, those rules and conventions which render this film a Western and that film a musical. This distinction between deep and surface structures-between a genre and its Eilms-provides the conceptual basis for any genre study. Of all the analogies we might use to better understand this distinc­tion, the most illuminating involves the "deepest" of human structures: language.

~e lan¡¡uage analogy

What is natural to mankind is not oral speech but the faculty of con­structing a language, i.e. a system of distinct signs corresponding to distinct ideas.

--Ferdinand de Saussure3

Among other things, the commerciaJ cinema is a communication system-it structures and delivers meaning. Throughout its history, evocative phrases like "the grammar of film" and "the cinematic language system" have suggested that Eilmic communication is comparable to verbal communication, although the extent and usefulness of that comparison are limited. Most recently, the film-Janguage analogy has undergone renewed interest within the growing field of semiology (or semiotics), a science that proposes to study human interaction as a vast network of social and interpersonal communication systems. Semiology is itself the brain

FILM GENRE AND THE GENRE FILM 19

Ferdinand de Saussure, who suggested that language pro­pattern" for the study of cultural signification. According to de

language is the one sign system shared by all cultures; its basic every syst.em of social communication.

and its jargon are a metaphor for genre study should be ob­"circuit of exchange" involving box-office "feedback," the stu­

audience hold a virtual "conversation" whereby they gradually r" of cinematic "discourse." Thus a genre can be studied, like a

sign system whose rules have been assimilated, con­through cultural consensus. Our shared knowledge of the

film genre enables us to understand and evaluate individual genre our shared knowledge of English grammar enables me to write this

you to interpret it. The distinction between grammar and usage, to that between deep structure and surface structure, originates in de

distinction between langue and parole in verbal language. For de Saus­and listener's shared knowledge of the grammatical rules that

language system (ia langue) enables them to develop and understand a range of individual utterances (la parole). American linguist

has described this distinction in terms of compelency and perfor­suggests that we should differentiate between our inherent capacity to

interpret on the one hand and our actually doing so on the other4

'1964). extend these ideas into genre study, we might think of the film genre as a grammar or system of rules of expression and construction and the indi-

genre film as a manifestation of these rules. Of course, film differs from in that our verbal competence is relatively consistent from speaker to

whereas our generic competence varies widely. If each of us had the same to Hollywood's thousands of genre films, a critica! theory would proba-

easier to construct. But obviously not everyone has a minimal understand­even the most popular and widespread genres, Jet alone the obscure struc­

of such "subgenres" as the beach-blanket movies of the '60s or the movies of the '70s.

although verballanguage systems are essentially neutral and mean-film genres are not. As a system, English grammar is not meaningful either

or in socially specific terms. It is manipulated by a speaker to make A film genre, conversely, has come into being precisely because of its

significance as a meaningful narrative system. Whereas a verbal statement •nrPsents a speaker's organization of neutral components into a meaningful pat-

a genre film represents an effort to reorganize a familiar, meaningful system an original way. Another interesting aspect of the language analogy concerns the tension be­

grammar and usage. Grammar in language is absolute and static, essentially mchanged by the range and abuses of everyday usage. In the cinema, however,

genre films seem to have the capacity to affect the genre-an utterance the potential to change the grammar that governs it. Even in film technology

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20 HOLLYWOOD GEN RES

(the impact of widescreen on the Western, for example, or of technicolor musical), we can see that individual usage influences both viewers and makers, and hence encourages them in effect to rerlegotiate the generic Whether or not sorne static nuclear deep structure exists, which defines the and somehow eludes the effects of time and variation, we cannot overl gradual changes (as revealed in individual genre films) in form and su the genre's surface. Genres evolve, and they tend to evolve quite rapidly due demands of the commercial popular media. But whether this evolution mere cosmetic changes in the surface structure (equivalent to fashionable or idioms in verballanguage) or whether it reflects substantial changes in the structure (the generic sys"tem itself) will remain, at least for now, an open

Perhaps the ultimate value of the film-language analogy is as a sort of method, methodological model. That is, the similarities between a language and a genre communication systems should encourage the analyst to approach genre films in much the same way that the linguist approaches individual ances. Like al! signifying systems, languages and genres exist essential!y within minds of their users: No single study of English grammar or of a film genre possibly describe the system completely. In this sense, studying film genre is unlike going to school as competent six-year-old speakers of English and being taught English grammar. In each case, we study the system that is the for our existing competence.

In al! of this, we should not lose sight of the critica!, evaluative factor that vates the genre critic, while it is virtual! y irrelevant to the linguist. The linguist' s concern is the process whereby we verbal!y communicate meaning; any concern for the qualify of that communication fal!s under the domain of rhetoric. As such, the film genre critic must be both linguist and "rhetor"-that is, he or she is con­cerned with both the process and the guality of any generic communication. The critic develops competence, a familiarity with the system, by watching and inter­preting movies and noting similarities. Ultimately, he or she is concerned with recognizing, appreciating, and articulating di!ferences among these movies. As crit­ics, we understand genre films beca use of their similarity with other films, but we appreciate them beca use of their difference. Therefore an outline of a basic gram­mar of genre filmmaking should precede any critica! analysis of individual films within a genre.

~ward a grammar of film genre

At this stage, we are somewhere "between" the point of departure (watching movies) and the point of arrival (appreciating and articulating difference-i.e., being critica!). We can appreciate difference only when we bt>gin to examine films

FILM GEN RE AND THE GENRE FILM 21

when we consider the systems whereby an individual film "makes far, we have considered the commercial and formal systems in­

filmmaking from a rather superficial perspective. In narrow­examine the workings of Hollywood genres, we will begin to un­

and formal systems are realized in actual production. itself should be addressed on three distinct levels of inguiry:

shared by virtually all genre films (and thus by all genres), shared by all the films within any individual genre, and those

that set one genre film off from all other films. goal is to discern a genre film' s guality, its social and aesthetic

this, we will attempt to see its relation to the various systems that in­example, in examining a film like The Searchers, it is not enough simply

formal characteristics that identify it as belonging to a particular is it enough to isolate the elements that make it superior. lnitially we

those traits that make the film-and indeed the Western form it­To repeat Wood's observation: we are so accustomed to dealing

with familiar filmic narra ti ve types, that we tend to isolate these types thus overlooking many of their shared social and aesthetic fea­

considering the Western, gangster, musical, and other Hollywood individual narrative systems, then, we will discuss the qualities that

these forms as genres. film, like virtually any_?tory, can be examined in terms of its funda­

components: plot, setting, and character. These components have status for the popular audience, due to their existence within a famil­that addresses and reaffirms the audience's values and attitudes. Thus

film's narrative components assume a preordained thematic significance quite different from non-generic narratives. Each genre film incorporates a

cultural context-what Warshow termed its "field of reference"-in the of a familiar social communify. This generic context" is more than the physical

which sorne genre critics have argued defines the genre as such. The frontier or the urban underworld is more than a physical locale which

the Western or the gangster film; it is a cultural milieu where inherent conflicts are animated, intensified, and resolved by familiar characters

patterns of action. Although all drama establishes a community that is dis­by conflict, in the genre film both the community and the conflict ha ve been

wentionalized. Ultimately, our familiarity with any genre seems to depend less a specific setting than on recognizing certain dramatic conflicts that

associate with specific patterns of action and character relationships. There are genres, in fact, like the musical and the screwball comedy, that we identify

through conventions of action and attitude, and whose settings vary . from one film to the next.

From this observation emerges a preliminary working hypothesis: the deter­identifying feature of a film genre is its cultural context, its community of

character types whose attitudes, val u es, and actions flesh out drama tic

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22 HOLLYWOOD GENRES

conflicts inherent within that community. The generic community is less a place (although it may be, as with the Western and gangster genres) than work of characters, actions, values, and attitudes. Each genre's status as a cultural community is enhanced by Hollywood's studio production system, each generic context is orchestrated by specialized groups of directors, producers, performers, sets, studio lots, and even studios themselves. sider Warner Brothers' heavy production of gangster films in the early MGM's musicals in the late '40s.)

A genre, then, represents a range of expression for filmmakers and a range of ence for viewers. 8oth filmmakers and viewers are sensitive to a genre's expression beca use of previous experiences with the genre that have coalesced a system of value-laden narrative conventions. It is this system of familiar characters performing familiar actions which celebrate familiar that represents the genre's narrative context, its meaningful cultural

lc:onography: lmagery and meol'\ling

The various generic communities--from the Old West to the urban underworld outer space- provide both a visual arena in which the drama unfolds and also intrinsically significant realm in which specific actions and values are In addressing the inherent meaning or intrinsic significance of objects and ters within any generic community, we are considering that genre's iconogruphy. lconography involves the process of narra/ive and visual coding that results from the repetition of a popular film story. A white hat in a Western ora top hat in a musi­cal, for instance, is significant because it has come to serve a specific symbolic funct!on within the narrative system.

i1\is coding process occurs in al! movies, since the nature of filmic storytelling is to assign meaning to "bare images" as the story develops. In the final seguence of Citizen Kane, for example, the symbolic reverberations of the burning sled and the "No Trespassing" sign result from the cumulative effects of the film's narrative process. These effects in Kane accumulate within that single film, though, and had no significance prior to our viewing of that film.

A generic icon, in contrast, assumes significance not only through its usage within individual genre films but also as that usage relates to the generic system itself. The Westerner's white horse and hat identify a character before he speaks or acts because of our pre~ious experienc¡; with men who wear white hats and ride white horses. The more interesting and engaging genre films, of course, do more than merely deliver the codes intact-as did many of those "B" Westerns of the '30s that almost literally "al! look alike"-but instead manipulate the codes to enhance their thematic effect. -- - -

Consider the dress code of the principal characters in The Man Who Shot Líber/y V alance (John Ford, 1962). In this film, Jimmy Stewart portrays Ransom Stoddard,

FILM GENRE AND THE GENRE FILM 23

Most genre filr provide us wit.

iconographic ' ' even before th opening credit quenc:es have : ished, as sho111 here with The Wagon. (Private

tion)

-bred lawyer bent upon civilizing the Western community of Shinbone. the film, Stoddard takes work as a dishwasher (Shinbone then had little lawyers) and continually wears a white apron--even during his climactic with Liberty V alance. Lee Marvin, portraying the archetypal Western an­Liberty Valance, hired by local cattlemen to prevent statehood and the

in of their rangeland, wears black leather and carries a black, silver­whip. Mediating these two opposing figures is Tom Doniphon (John a charismatic local rancher who sympathizes with the cause of statehood.

eventually murders Valance to save Stoddard, thus enabling Stoddard political prominence and to assume the role of community leader.

roughout the film, Doniphon is dressed in various combinations of black and His clothing reflects his ambiguous role as murderous purveyor of eventual order. Of course, director Ford develops Doniphon's tragic role by manipu­a good deal more than the iconography of Western dress, but this example

how filmmakers use a genre's established visual cedes to create complex

and thematic situations. A genre's iconography involves not only the visual coding of the narrative, but

thematic va!ue as well (white civilization good versus black anarchy evil, black-and-white as thematically ambiguous). We distinguish between char-

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24 HOLLYWOOD GENRES

acters who wear white and characters who wear black in Westerns, or sing and dance and those who do not in musicals, and these distinctions thematic conflicts inherent within these communities. Because visual volves narrative and social values, it also extends to certain nonvisual genre filmmaking. Such elements as dialogue, music, and even casting come key components of a genre's iconography.

Think, for example, of the appropriateness of the casting in the film scribed (Stewart as naive idealist, Marvin as maniaca! anarchist, Wayne as middleman), or think of the way certain movie stars are generally associated specific genres. Katharine Hepburn, Fred Astaire, Joan Crawford, and Bogart have become significant components of a genre's meaning-making When we think of Bogart as the typical hardboiled detective or of Astaire as ultimate, spontaneous, self-assured music man, we are thinking not of the lar human being or of any single screen role but rather of a screen persona-i.e., attitudinal posture that effectively transcends its role in any individual film .

A genre's iconography reflects the value system that defines its particular tural community and informs the objects, events, and character types co it. Each genre's implicit system of values and beliefs-its ídeology or world determines its cast of characters, its problems (dramatic conflicts), and the tions to those problems. In fact, we might define film genres, particularly at earlier stages of their development, as social problem-solving operations: They peatedly confront the ideological conflicts (opposing value systems) within a tain cultural community, suggesting various solutions through the actions of main characters. Thus, each genre's problem-solving function affects its distinct formal and conceptual identity.

Charader and setting: Communities in conflict

In discussing the grammar (or system of conventions) of any Hollywood film genre, it is important to note that the material economy, which motivated the studios to refine story formulas, translates into narralíve economy for filmmakers and viewers. Each genre incorporates a sort of narrative shorthand whereby significant dramatic conflicts can intensify and then be resolved through established patterns of action and by familiar character types. These dramatic conflicts are themselves the identifying fea ture of any genre; they represent the transformation of sorne social, historical, or even geographical (as in the Western) aspect of American cul­ture into one locus of events and characters.

Although the dramatic conflicts are basic to the generic "community," we can­not identify that community solely by its physical setting. If film genres were identified by setting alone, then we would have to deal with an "urban" genre that includes such disparate forms as gangster films, backstage musicals, and detective films. Because the setting provides an arena for conflicts, which are themselves de-

fiLM GENRE AND THE GENRE fiLM 25

and attitudes of the participants, we must look to the ge­and the conflicts they generate in identifying any genre. And

. generic community and its characters in relat ion to the system ·•·'- define the problem and eventually are appealed to in solv-

" social problem (or dramatic conflict) in one genre is not nec­i:n another. Law and order is a problem in the gangster and de-

not in the musical. Conversely, courtship and marriage are but not in the gangster and detective genres. Individu­

in the detective genre (through the hero's occupation and world gangster film (through the hero's career and eventual death),

~Clpal characters in the musical comprornise their individuality in Tomantic embrace and thus demonstrate their willingness to be in-

social community. In each of these genres, the characters' identi ­roles (or "functions") are determined by their relationship with

and its value structure. As such, the generic character is psycholog-

·J' .·-r·-N"~""

the complex of imogery ot work in each of these stills. The dress, demeanor, setting, and of course the performers themselves all provide specific generic

lnlnrmntion to the viewer. (Prívate Collection); (Wisconsin Center for Film and Theater Research)

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26 HOLLYWOOD GENRES

ically static-he or she is the physical embodiment of an attitude, a style, view, of a predetermined and essentially unchanging cultural posture. Indian, gangster or cop, guy or doll, the generic character is identified by function and status within the community.

The static vision of the generic hero-indeed of the en tire constellation iar character types-helps to define the community and to anímate its conflicts. For example, the Western hero, regardless of his social or legal is necessarily an agent of civilization in the savage frontier. He represents social order and the threatening savagery that typify the Western milieu. animates the inherent dynamic qualities of the community, providing a vehicle through which the audience can confront generic conflicts.

This approach also enables us to distinguish between such seemingly "urban crime" formulas as the gangster and detective genres. Usually, both are set in a contemporary urban milieu and address conflicts principally social order and anarchy and between individual morality and the common But because of the characteristic attitudes and values of the genre's principal acters, these conflicts assume a different status in each genre and are resolved cordingly. The detective, like the Westerner, represents the mediating the forces of order and anarchy, yet somehow remaining separate each. He has opted to construct his own value system and behavioral code, happens (often, almost accidentally) to coincide with the forces of social order. the detective's predictable return to his office retreat at film's end and his refusa assimilate the values and lifestyle of the very society he serves ultimately his-and the genre's-ambiguous social stance. The gangster film, convers" displays little thematic ambiguity. The gangster has aligned himself with the of crime and socia] disorder, so both his societal role and his conflict with the munity welfare demand his eventual destruction.

All film genres treat some form of threat-violent or otherwise-to the order. However, it is the attitudes of the principal characters and the resolutions precipitated by their actions which finally distinguish the various genres from one another. Nevertheless, there is a vital distinction between kinds of generic settings and conflicts. Certain genres (Western, detective, gangster, war, et al.) have con­flicts that, indigenous to the environment, reflect the physical and ideological strugg]e for its control. These conflicts are animated and resolved either by an in­dividua] maJe hero or by a collective (war, science fiction, cavalry, certain recent Westerns). Other genres have conflicts that are not indigenous to the locale but are the result of the conflict between the values, attitudes, and actions of its principal characters and the "civilized" setting they inhabit. Conflicts in these genres (musi­cal, screwball comedy, family melodrama) generally are animated by a "doubled" hero-usua!!y a romantic couple whose cot¡rtship is complicated and eventually ideologically resolved. A musical's setting may be a South Pacific island or the backstage of a Broadway theater, but we relate to the film immediately by its treatment of certain sexual and occupationa] conflicts and .a]so by our familiarity with the type of characters played by its "stars."

FILM GEN RE AND THE GEN RE FILM 27

numbers themselves which identify these films as and gangster films, for example, contain musical num­

~ontused with musicals (Westerns like Dodge City and Rio gangster films like The Roaring Twenlies and The Rise and Fall

frpntier saloon and the gangster's speakeasy may be conven­their respective communities, but their entertainment func­

to the central issue. However, in "musical Westerns" like The Harvey Girls, and Oklahoma!, the nature and resolution of

as well as the characterization dearly are expressed via the The Harvey Girls, for instance, the narrative centers around the dozen women-induding Judy Garland and Cyd Charisse,

us with a generic cue-who migrate West to work in a res­Western conventions are nodded to initially: the girls are told headed West that "You're bringing civilization . ... You girls are

to the West"; later, there is a comic brawl between these "Harvey local saloon girls. But the Western genre's fundamental traits (the

hero responding to the threat of savagery and physical violence unstable milieu) are not basic to the film. Once the charac­

are established, the setting might as well be Paris or New York

Oz. these examples indicate, the various Hollywood genres manipulate social setting quite differently in developing dramatic conflicts. We

a broad distinction between genres of determinale space and those of space, between genres of an ideologically contested setting and an stable setting. In a genre of determínate space (Western, gangster,

et al.), we have a symbolic arena of action. It represents a cultural realm fundamental values are in a state of sustained conflict. In these genres, contest itself and its necessary arena are "determínate" -a specific social

"' is violently enacted within a familiar locale according to a prescribed sys­rules and behavioral cedes. iconographic arena in determínate genres is entered by an individual or

hero, at the outset, who acts upon it, and finally leaves. This entrance­recurs most in genres characterized by an individual hero: for example,

Westerner enters a frontier community, eliminates (or perhaps causes) a threat survival, and eventually rides "into the sunset"; the detective takes the case, dgates it, and returns to his office; the gangster, introduced to urban crime, to power, and finally is killed or jailed. In these genres, the individual hero

a rigid, essentially static attitude in dealing with his very dynamic,

'contested world. In contrast, genres of indeterminate space generally involve a doubled (and thus

dynamic) hero in the guise of a romantic couple who inhabit a "civilized" setting, as in the musical, screwball comedy, and social melodrama. The physical and ideological "contest" which determines the arena of action in the Western, gang­ster, and detective genres is not an issue here. Instead, genres of indeterminate

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JI Similarity and differen::e: the disi·inctive narrative contexts of the screwba/1 comedy

(lt Happened One Night, above) and the gangster film (The Public Enemy, below)

clearly overwhelm the apparent similarities between these two scenes. (Culver Pictures); (Culver Pictures)

28

FILM GENRE AND THE GENRE FILM 29

a civilized, ideologically stable milieu, which depends less upon place than on a highly conventionalized value system. Here con­from a struggle over control of the environment, but rather from

the principal characters to bring their own views in line either with or, more often, in line with that of the larger community.

of determínate space, these genres rely upon a progression from ragonism to eventual embrace. The kiss or embrace signals the inte­

into the larger cultural community. In addition, these genres conventions to establish a social setting-the proscenium or the­

with its familiar performers in sorne musicals, for example, or the re­small-town community and the family home in the melodrama. But be­e generic conflicts arise from attitudinal , (generally male-female)

rather than from a physical conflict, the coding in .these films tends to and more ideological and abstract. This may account for the sparse

they have received from genre analysts, despite their widespread popu-

genres of indeterminate, civilized space (musical, screwball comedy, and genres of determínate, contested space (Western, gangster,

might be distinguished according to their differing ritual functions. The tend to celebrate the values of social integration, whereas the latter uphold

of social arder. The former tend-rocastaii. attitudinally unstable couple or unit into·some representative microcosm of American society, so that their

and/or romantic "coupling" reflects their integration into a stable en­. The latter tend to cast an individual, violent, attitudinally static male

a familiar, predetermined milieu to examine the opposing forces vying for In making this distinction, though, we should not lose sight of these

shared social function . In addressing basic cultural conflicts and celebrat-the values and attitudes whereby these conflicts might be resolved, all film

represent the filmmakers' and audience's cooperative efforts to "tame" beasts, both actual and imaginary, which threaten the stability of our every­

day lives.

Plot strudure: From conflid to resolution

As a popular film audience, our shared needs and expectations draw us into the movie theater. If we are drawn there by a genre film, we are familiar with the rit­ual. In its animation and resolution of basic cultural conflicts, the genre film cele­brates our collective sensibilities, providing an array of ideological strategies for negotiating social conflicts. The conflicts themselves are significant (and dramatic) enough to ensure our repeated attendance. The films within a genre, representing variations on a cultural theme, will employ different means of reaching narrative resolution, but that closure is generally as familiar as the community and its char-

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30 HOllYWOOD GENRES

acters. (Think of the general discomfort felt upon realizing, even quite early in seeing a genre film, that Cagney's heroic gangster would "get his" or that Tracy and Hepburn would cease their delightful hostilities and embrace in time for the closing credits.)

Actually, the most significant feature of any generic narrative may be its resolu­tion-that is, its efforts to solve, even if only temporarily, the conflicts that have disturbed the community welfare. The Western, for example, despite its historical and geographical distance from most viewers, confronts real and immediate social conflicts: individual versus community, town versus wilderness, arder versus anar­chy, and so on. If there is anything escapist about these narratives, it is their re­pea.ted assertion that these conflicts can be solved, that seemingly timeless cultural oppositions can be resolved favorably for the larger community.

In a Hollywood Western, as in virtually any Hollywood genre film, plot devel­opment is effectively displaced by setting and character: once we recognize the fa­miliar cultural arena and the players, we can be fairly certain how the game will be played and how it will end. Because the characters, conflicts, and resolution of the non-generic narrative are unfamiliar and unpredictable, we negotiate them less by previous filmic experiences than by previous "real-world" (personal and social) experiences. Clearly, both generic and non-generic narratives must rely to sorne degree upon real-world and also upon previous narrative-filmic experiences in arder to make sense. In the genre film, however, the predictability of conflict and resolution tends to turn our attention away from the linear, cause-and-effect plot, redirecting it to the conflict itself and the opposed value systems it represents. In­stead of a linear chain of events, which are organized by the changing perceptions of an individual protagonist, the genre film's plot traces the intensification of sorne cultural opposition which is eventually resolved in a predictable fashion.

Thus, we might describe the plot structure of a genre film in the following way:

establishmenl (via various narrative and iconographic cues) of the generic community with its inherent dramatic conflicts;

anima/ion of those conflicts through the actions and attitudes of the genre' s constellation of characters;

inlensification of the conflict by means of conventional situations and dra­matic confrontations until the conflict reaches crisis proportions;

resolution of the crisis in a fashion which eliminates the physical and/or ideological threat and thereby celebrates the (temporarily) well-ordered community.

In this plot structure, linear development is subordinate to and qualified by the opposilional narrative strategy. Opposing value systems are either mediated by an individual or a collective, which eliminates one of the opposing systems. Or else these oppositions are actually embodied by a doubled hero whose (usually ro­mantic) coupling signals their synthesis. In either instance, resolution occurs, even

FilM GENRE AND THE GEN RE FilM 31

only temporarily, in a way that strokes the collective sensibilities of the mass au­It is in this context that the genre film's function as cultural ritual is most

their formulaic narrative process, genre films celebrate the most fundamental 1emogical precepts--they examine and affirm "Americanism" with all its ram-

conflicts, contradictions, and ambiguities. Not only do genre films establish a of continuity between our cultural past and present (or between present and

as with science fiction), but they also attempt to eliminate the distinctions them. As social ritual, genre films function to stop time, to portray our

in a stable and invariable ideological position. This attitude is embodied in generic hero-and in the Hollywood star system itself-and is ritualized in the

:esolution precipitated by the hero's actions. Whether it is a historical Western or futuristic fantasy, the genre film celebrates certain inviolate cultural attributes . Ultimately, the sustained success of any genre depends upon at least two fac­

the thematic appeal and significance of the conflicts it repeatedly addresses its flexibility in adjusting to the audience's and fiimmakers' changing attitudes

those conflicts. These can be seen, for example, in the Western hero's sta-as both rugged individualist and also as agent of a civilization that continually

his individualism. The degree to which that opposition has evolved over the seventy-five years has accommodated changes in our cultural sensibilities. Or

science fiction, a literary and cinematic genre that realized widespread Jopmamy in the late '40s and early 'SOs. This genre articulated the conflicts and

that accompanied the development of atomic power and the prospect of travel. Because science fiction deals with so specialized a cultural

conflict--essentially with the limits and value of human knowledge and scientific experimentation-it is considerably less flexible, but no less topical, than the Western. Nevertheless, each genre has a static nucleus that manifests its thematic oppositions or recurring cultural conflicts. And each genre has, through the years, dynamically evolved as shown by the ways its individual films manipulate those oppositions. If we see genre as a problem-solving strategy, then, the static nucleus could be conceived as the problem and the variety of solutions (narrative resolu­tions) as its dynamic surface structure .

In this sense, a genre's basic cultural oppositions or inherent dramatic conflicts represent its most basic determining feature. Also the sustained popularity of any genre indicates the essentially unresolvable, irreconcilable nature of those opposi­tions. Resolution involves a point of dramatic closure in which a compromise or temporary solution to the conflict is projected into a sort of cultural and historical timelessness. The threatening externa! force in contested space is violently de­stroyed and eliminated as an ideological threat; in uncontested space the vital lover's spontaneity and lack of social inhibition are bridled by a domesticating counterpart in the name of romantic !ove. In each, philosophical or ideological conflicts are "translated" into emotional terms--either violent or sexual, or both-and are resolved accordingly. In the former, the emotive resolution is ex­ternalized, in the latter it is internalized. Still, the resolution does not function to

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32 HOLLYWOOD GEN RES

salve the basic cultural conflict. The conflict is simply recast into an emotional con­text where it can be expeditiously, if not always logically, resolved.

As a rule, generic resolution operates by a process of reduclion: the polar opposi­tion is reduced, either through the elimination of one of the forces (in genres of determínate, contested space) or through the integration of the forces into a single unit (in genres of indeterminate, civilized space). The contest in determínate space generally is physically violent. Frequently, up until the resolution, there is more tension than action. The violent resolution usually helps the community, but only rarely does the hero assimilate its value system. In fact, his insistence that he maintain his individuality emerges as a significant thematic statement. As such, these films often involve a dual celebration: the hero's industrious isolationism offsets the genre's celebration of the ideal social order.

There is a certain logic and symmetry in the gangster's death, the Westerner's fading into the sunset, the detective's return to his office to await another case. Each of these standard epilogues implicitly accepts the contradictory values of its genre, al! of which seem to center around the conflict between individualism and the common good . The buiit-in ambiguity of this dual celebration serves, at least partially, to minimize the narrative ruplure resulting from the effort to resolve an unresolvable cultural conflict. This violation of narra ti ve logic is itself fundamental to al! of Hollywood's story formulas, in that the demand for a "happy ending" re­sists the complexity and deep-seated nature of the conflict.

Because genres of social order invariably allow the individual hero his forma­lized flight from social integration and from the compromising of his individuality, the narrative rupture is usually less pronounced than in genres of social integra­tion. The cultural conflicts in genres of integration are revealed through the dou­bling of the principal characters-that is, through their opposed relationship, usual! y expressed as romantic antagonism. With the integration of their opposing attitudes into a cohesive unit (the married couple, the family) , the conflicts are re­solved and basic communal ideals are ritualized. But the cultural contradictions that inhibit integration throughout these films-between spontaneous individual expression and social propriety, for example--<:annot be resolved without severely subverting the characters' credibility and motivation.

Are we to assume that the screwball couple's madcap social behavior and mu­tual antagonism will magically dissolve once they are wed? Or that the conflicts, which have separated the song-and-dance team throughout rehearsals, will some­how vanish after the climactic show? To avoid these questions and to minimize the sense of rupture, these genre films synthesize their oppositions through sorne for­mal celebration or social ritual: a Broadway show, a betrothal, a wedding, and so on. In this way, they don't actually resolve their conflicts; they reconstitute them by concluding the narrative at an emotive climax, at precisely the moment when the doubled principals acquiesce to each other's demands. The suggestion of living "happily ever after" tends to mask or gloss over the inevitable loss associated with each character's compromise. What is celebrated is the collective value of their in­tegration into an idealized social unit.

FILM GENRE AND THE GEN RE FILM 33

In al/ genre films, there is a sense of loss. At the encl of Shane, the initiate-hero ( Srandon De Wilde) must part with the hero ( Alan Ladd). (Wisconsin Center for Film and The-

ater Researcl1)

This sense of loss accompanies the resolution of all genre films because of the contradictory, irreconcilable nature of their conflicts. Through violent reduction or romantic coupling, however, the loss is masked. lt is, in effect, effectively re­dressed in the emotional climax. What is to become, yve might very well ask our­selves, once the film ends, of the uninhibited music man after he weds the gold­hearted domesticator-and what's to become of her as well? What's to become of the savage frontier lawman once the social order he instills finally arrives? These are questions which, unless initiated by the films themselves, we know better than to ask. Genre films not only project an idealized cultural self-image, but they project it into a realm of historical timelessness. Typically, films produced later in a genre's development tend to challenge the tidy and seemingly naive resolutions of earlier genre films, and we will discuss this tendency in sorne detail when we

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34 HOllYWOOD GENRES

examine generic evolution. What we should note here, though, and what is being masked by such a resolution is the fundamental appeal of both sides in a drama tic conflict. Whatever oppositions we examine in genre films-individual versus com­munity, man versus woman, work versus play, order versus anarchy-these do not

rrepresent "positive" and "negative" cultural values. For one of the reasons for a \genre's popularity is the sustained significance of the "problem" that it repeatedly ~ddresses. Thus, generic conflict and resolution involve opposing systems of Jblues and attitudes, both of which are deemed significant by contemporary Ameri­can culture.

Ncmrative strategy and social functiol!'il: C«»rntrC~~didicms, il'nappy endi111gs, and the status que

'In surveying the setting, characterization, and plot structure of Hollywood film genres, we have made severa! general distinctions between genres of order and genres of integration. r have suggested that these two types of genres represent two dominant narrative strategies of genre filmmaking. Perhaps it would be useful to summarize these strategies.

Certain genres (Western, gangster, detective, et al.) center on an individual male protagonist, generally a redeemer figure, who is the focus of dramatic conflicts within a setting of contested space. As such, the hero media tes the cultural contra­dictions inherent within his milieu. Conflicts within these genres are externalized, translated into violence, and usually resolved through the elimination of sorne threat to the social order. The resolution in these films often is somewhat ambigu­ous. The hero, either through his departure or death at film's end, does not assimi­late the values and lifestyle of the community but instead maintains his individu­ality. Genres that incorporate this narrative strategy I have termed riles of order.

Other genres (musical, screwball comedy, family melodrama, et al.) are set in "civilized" space and trace the integration of the central characters into the com­munity. There is generally a doubled (romantic couple) or collective (usually a family) hero in these genres. Their personal and social conflicts are internalized, translated into emotional terms, with their interpersonal antagonism eventually yielding to the need for a well-ordered community. Integration invariably occurs through romantic !ove. After a period of initial hostility, the couple find them­selves in a final embrace. The genres which incorporate this narrative strategy I have termed riles of integra/ion.

There is considerable overlap between the rites, of course, in that all order genres address the prospect of social integration, and all integration genres are concerned with maintaining the existing social order. But this general distinction does provide a starting point for analysis. We have a set of assumptions to develop and refine while examining individual genres and their films. For the purposes of clarity and simplicity, the following chart may be useful.

FILM GENRE ANO THE GEN RE FilM 35

CHARACTERISTICS OF GENRES OF ORDER ANO GENRES OF INTEGRATION

ORDER (Western, gangster, detective)

individual (maJe dominant) contested space (ideologically unstable) externalized-violent elimination (death) mediation-redemption macho code isolated self-reliance utopia-as-promise

INTEGRATION (musical, screwball comedy, family r -~----- -

couple/collective (female don civilized space (ideolog¡cauy ' internalized--emotional embrace (!ove) integration-domestication maternal-familia! code community cooperation utopia-as-reality

both types of genres, one of our concerns must be the relationship narrative strategy and social function. Although I have suggested that

genre represents a distinct problem-solving strategy that repeatedly ad­basic cultural contradictions, genres are not blindly supportive of the cul­

status quo. The genre film's resolution may reinforce the ideology of the society, but the nature and articulation of the dramatic conflicts leading to

clímax cannot be ignored. lf genres develop and survive because they repeat­flesh out and reexamine cultural conflicts, then we must consider the possibil­

genres function as much to challenge and criticize as to reinforce the values inform them.

As has often been said, Hollywood movies are considerably more effective in capacity to raise questions than to answer them. This characteristic seems

particularly true of genre films. Andas such, the genre's fundamental impulse is to renegoliale the tenets of American ideology. And ;hat is so fascinating

and confounding about Hollywood genre films is their capacity to "play it both ways," to both criticize and reinforce the values, beliefs, and ideals of our culture within the same narrative context.

Consider Molly Haskell's description of the narrative resolution in certain melodramas of the 1930s and '40s: "Tne forced enthusiasm and neat evasions of so many happy endings have only Í_Rcr.easg_<J. t~ suspicion that darkness and despair follow marriage, a suspicion th~a.Q¡;J!!~ confirmed by carefully pretending otherwise"5 (Haskell, 1974, p. 124). Implicit in Haskell's statement is the assump­tion that the audience knew better than to believe the pat "happy end." She as­sumes that the audience was sensitive, consciously or otherwise, to the narrative rupture involved in a melodrama's progression from conflict to resolution. One could just as easily argue the opposite, of course, that audiences actually believed and bought V.1holesale, consciously or otherwise, the "neat evasions of so many happy endings."

The fact is, however, that as genres develop their conflicts are stated ever more effectively, while their resolutions become ever more ambiguous and ironic. This

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¡· '

36 HOllYWOOD GENRES

would seem to support Haskell's position, and further to undercut the simplistic conception of the audience as utterly naive and of the Hollywood genre film as mere escapist entertainment. Let us consider, even if only briefly, the issue of a genre's increasingly sophisticated capacity for presenting its conflicts, a capacity which seems closely related to the process of generic evolution .

Generric evolu&ion: Pattems of ir¡,¡•;reasing self-consciousness

We have already noted that genre filmmakers are in a rather curious bind: they must continually vary and reinvent the generic formula . At the same time they must exploit those qualities that made the genre popular in the fi rst place. As Rob­ert v\farshow puts it: "Variation is absolutely necessary to keep the type from be­coming sterile; we do not want to see the same movie over and over again, only the same form"

6

(Warshow, 1962, p . 147). His point is well taken: the genre's "deeper" concern for certain basic cultural issues may remain intact, but to remain vital its films must keep up with the audience's changing conception of these issues and with its growing familiarity with the genre. But how does a genre evolve, and does its evolution follow any consistent or predictable pattern? If certain formal and thematic traits distinguish a genre throughout its development, what changes as the form evolves?

First, a genre's evolution involves both interna! (formal) and externa! (cultural, thematic) factors. The subject matter of any film story is derived from certain "real-world" characters, conflicts, settings, and so on. But once the story is re­peated and refined into a formula, its basis in experience gradually gives way to its own interna! narrative logic. Thus, the earliest Westerns (many of which actually depicted then-current events) obviously were based on social and historical real­ity. But as the genre developed, it gradually took on its own reality. E ven the most naive viewer seems to understand this. It comes as no surprise to learn that West­ern heroes didn't wear white hats and fringed buckskin, that gunfights on Main Street were an exceedingly rare occurrence, or that the towns and dress codes and other trappings of movie Westerns were far different from those of the authentic American West. In this sense, we recognize and accept the distinctive grammar­the system of storytelling conventions-that has evolved through the repeated telling of Western tales.

Simultaneously, however, we also realize that these real-world factors, basic to the genre's dramatic conflicts, are themselves changing. Consider how the chang­ing image of Native Americans ("Injuns") has been influenced by our culture's changing view of Manifest Destiny, the settling of the West, and the treatment of peoples whose cultures were overwhelmed by the encroachment of civilization. Or consider how the atom bomb and space travel affected the development of the sci­ence fiction genre after World War II; consider the impact of organized crime on the gangster and detective genres in the 1950s. Perhaps the effects of these externa!

FilM GENRE AND THE GENRE FilM 37

are best seen case by case. A genre's formal interna! evolution, how­when considered in terms of our growing familiarity with it over

seem to follow a rather consistent pattern of schematic development. "Textuality and Generality" (Language and Cinema), Christian Metz

the interna! evolution of the Westem. Metz suggests that, as early as Ford's My Darling Clemenline, the "classic" Westem had assumed

of parody which was an integral part of the genre, and yet it remained a He goes on to assert that the "superwesterns" of the 1950s "passed

to contestation," but that they "remained fully Westerns." He then that in many recent Westerns, "contestation gives way to 'deconstruc­entire film is an explication of the [Western] code and its relation to his­

has passed from parody to critique, but the work is still a Western." contends that with every "stage" of its evolutionary process, the Western

its essence, its generic identity. He concludes his discussion with a rather observation: "Such is the infinite text one calls a genre"7 (Metz, 1974,

""' views the Western genre not only as a system of individual films, but fur­as a composite text in itself. His point is that the Western represents a basic

which is never completely "told," but is reexamined and reworked in a vari­ways. Within these variations, Metz discovers a pattern of historical devei­

His classic-parody-contestation-critique progression suggests that both and audience grow increasingly self-conscious regarding the genre's

qualities and its initial social function. Actually, Metz's view of the West-formal evolution is quite similar to the views of various historians who ha ve

the historical development of styles and genres in other arts. Perhaps the concise and influential study of this kind is Henri Focillon's The Life of Forros

Arl, in which he develops a schema for the "life span" of cultural forms:

Forms obey their own rules-rules that are inherent in the forms themselves, or better, in the regions of the mind where they are located and centered-and there is no reason why we should not undertake an investigation of how these great en­sembles ... behave throughout the phases which we call their life. The successive states through which they pass are more or less lengthy, more or less intense, ac­cording to the style itself: the experimental age, the classic age, the age of refine­ment, the baroque age.8 (Focillon, 1942, p. 10)

Focillon's view is somewhat broader than Metz's. But he also observes that the continua! reworking of a conventionalized form- whether it is an architectural style or a genre of painting--generates a growing awareness of the conventions themselves. Thus a form passes through an experimental stage, during which its conventions are isolated and established, a classic stage, in which the conventions reach their "equilibrium" and are mutually understood by artist and audience, an age of refinemenl, during which certain formal and stylistic details embellish the

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38 HOLLYWOOD GENRES

form, and finally a baroque (or "mannerist" or "self-reflexive") stage, when the form and its embellishments are accented to the point where they themselves be­come the "substance" or "content" of the work.

Using this strategy with film genres, we might begin with this observation: at the earliest stages of its life span, a genre tends to exploit the cinematic medium as a medium. lf a genre is a society collectively speaking to itself, then any stylistic flourishes or formal self-consciousness will only impede the transmission of the message. At this stage, genre films transmit a certain idealized cultural self-image with as little "formal interference" as possible. Once a genre has passed through its experimental stage where its conventions have been established, it enters into its classical stage. We might consider this stage as one of formal lransparency. Both the narrative formula and the film medium work together to transmit and rein­force that genre's social message-its ideology or problem-solving strategy-as directly as possible to the audience.

Leo Braudy describes the process of generic evolution: "Genre films essentially ask the audience, 'Do you still want to believe this?' Popularity is the audience an­swering, 'Y es.' Change in genre occurs when the audience says, 'That's too infan­tile a form of what we believe. Show us something more complicated' "9 (Braudy, 1976, p. 179). This rather casual observation involves a number of insights, espe­cially in its allusion to the "conversation" between filmmakers and audience and in its reference to audience "belief." The genre film reaffirms what the audience believes both on individual and on communallevels. Audience demand for varia­tion does not indicate a change in belief, but rather that the belief should be reex­amined, grow more complicated formally and thematically, and display, more­over, stylistic embellishment.

Thus, the end of a genre's classic stage can be viewed as that point at which the genre's straightforward message has "saturated" the audience. With its growing awareness of the formal and thematic structures, the genre evolves into what Fo­cillon termed the age of refinement. As a genre's classic conventions are refined and eventually parodied and subverted, its transparency gradually gives way to opacily: we no longer look through the form (or perhaps "into the mirror") to glimpse an idealized self-image, rather we loo k al the form ilself to examine and ap­preciate its structure and its cultural appeal.

A genre's progression from transparency to opacity-from straightforward storytelling to self-conscious formalism-involves its concerted effort to explain itself, to address and evaluate its very status as a popular form. A brief considera­tion of any Hollywood genre would support this view, particularly those with ex­tended life spans like the musical or the Western. By the early 1950s, for example, both of these genres had begun to exhibit clear signs of formal self-consciousness. In such self-reflexive musicals as The Barkleys of Broadway (1949), An American in París (1951), Singin' in lhe Rain (1952), The Band Wagon (1953), and It's Always Fair Wealher (1955), the narrative conflict confronts the nature and value of musical comedy as a form of popular entertainment. In accord with the genre's conven­tions, these conflicts are couched in a male-female opposition, but the boy-gets-

FILM GENRE AND THE GENRE FILM 39

Parodies of established genres e

gr¡.od indication of how we be" miliar with a genre's conventior. appreciate seeing these convent verted. In a modern dance sequ The Bond Wagon, Cyd Charisse Astaire parody the hardboiled o genre. (Hoblitzelle Theater Arts Collectior

girl resolution is now complicated by a tension between serious art and mere en­tertainment. These movies interweave motifs involving successful courtship and the success of The Show, and that success is threatened and resolved in a fashion

which provides an "apology" for the musical as popular art. In The Barkleys of Broadway, for instance, Ginger Rogers abandons musical com-

edy for "legitima te theater" but eventually returns both to the stage musical and to her former partner-spouse (Fred Astaire) . Gene Kelly in An American in París must decide between a career as a painter, supported by spinster-dowager Nina Foch, anda "natural" life of dance and music with young Leslie Caron. In these and the

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40 HOLLYWOOD GE NRE S

other films, the generic conventions, which earlier were components of the unspoken ideology, have now become the central thematic elements of the tive. No longer does the genre simply celebrate the values of music, dance, popular entertainment, it actually "critiques" and "deconstructs" them in the cess10 (Feuer, 1978).

The Western genre, which was entering its classic age in the late 1930s coach, Union Pacific, Dodge City, Deslry Rides Again, Fronlier Marshal, all 1939), its by the 1950s a similar formal and thematic self-scrutiny. Such films as Red (1948), l Shot ]esse James (1949), The Gunfighter (1950), Winchesler 73 (1950), Noon (1952), and The Naked Spur (1953) indicate that the genre had begun to tion its own conventions, especially regarding the social role and psychological .make-up of the hero. Consider, for example, the substantial changes in the screen persona of John Wayne or of Jimmy Stewart during this period. In such baroque Westerns as Red River and The Searchers (starring Wayne) and Winchesler 73, The Naked Spur, The Man from Lar:_¡;¡m-ie,,and Two Rode Togelher (Stewart), Wayne's stoic machismo and Stewart's '~w-shu~' naiveté are effectively inverted to reveal genuinely psychotic, antisocia!'figu!'es:- ~ '"("4:)n, <, h r_~le J.- i.:•N .. >.,_v',. 'd

Natura!! y, we do not expect a classic Westen1er like Wayne's Ringo Kid in Stage­coach to exhibit the psychological complexity or the "antiheroic" traits of later Western figures. Our regard for a film like Stagecoach has to do with its clear, straightforward articulation of the Western myth. A later film like Red River, which incorporates a younger figure (Montgomery Clift) to offset and qualify the classic Westerner's heroic posture, serves to refine and to call into question the genre's basic values. These values are subverted, or perhaps even rejected altogether, in later films like The Searchers, The Wild Bunch, and even in a comic parody like Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid. In these films, the "code of the West" with its implicit conflicts and ideology provides the dramatic focus, but our regard for that code changes as do the actions and attitudes of the principal characters.

The Western and the musical seem to represent genres in which the evolution­ary "cycle" seems more or less complete. However, not all genres complete that cycle or necessarily follow such a progression. For example, in the gangster genre, various externa! pressures (primarily the threat of government censorship and re­ligious boycott) disrupted the genre's interna! evolution. And in the war genre, the prosocial aspects of supporting a war effort directly ruled out any subversion or even the serious questioning of the hero's attitudes. War films that did question values were made after the war and generally are considered as a subgenre. There are also genres curren ti y in midcycle, like the "disaster" or the "occult" genres popularized during the 1970s. The disaster genre, whose classic stage was launched with The Poseidon Advenlure and Airporl, has evolved so rapidly that a par­ody of the genre, The Big Bus (1976), appeared within only a few years of the form's standardization. Interestingly, the audience didn't seem to know what to make of The Big Bus, and the film died at the box office; Apparentiy the genre hadn't suffi­ciently saturated the audience to the point where a parody could be appreciated.

Thus, it would seem that, throughout a genre's evolution from transparent social

FILM GEN RE AND THE GEN RE FILM 41

self-reflexivity, there is a gradual shift in narrative em­value to formal aesthetic value. Because continued variation

us to a genre's social message, our interests, and those of the expand from the message itself to its articulation, from the

and narrative artistry of its telling. lt is no coincidence, then, that who worked with a genre later in its development, are consid­

tend to regard early genre filmmakers as storytellers or craftsmen as artists. Naturally there are exceptions-Ford's early Westerns,

s '30s musicals, all of Hitchcock's thrillers-but these involve narrative artistry and understanding of the genre's thematic com-

apparent throughout their careers. speaking, it seems that those features most often associated with nar-

nbiguity, thematic complexity, irony, formal self-conscious­are evident in films produced earlier in a genre's development. They themselves into the formula itself as it evolves. We are dealing here

artistry of the formula itself as it grows and develops. A new-status as social ritual generally resists any ironic, ambiguous, or

treatment of its narrative message. But as filmmakers and audi-more familiar with the message as it is varied and refined, the varia­

begin to exhibit qualities associated with narrative art. not mean that early genre films have no aesthetic value or later ones

value. There is, rather, a shift in emphasis from one cultural function ritualistic) to another (formal, aesthetic). And both are evident in aH genre genre's initial and sustained popularity may be due primarily to its social

but a degree of aesthetic appeal is also apparent in even the earliest, or transparently, prosocial genre films. Each genre seems to manifest a dis­

visual and compositional identity: the prospect of infinite space and limitless in the Western, documentary urban realism in the gangster film, the

Expressionism" of film noir and the hardboiled detective film, the musi-

celebration of life through motion and song, and so on. aesthetic potential may have been tapped by filmmakers-writers, pro-performers, cameramen, editors, as well as directors-who quite simply

good movies. They manipulated any number of narrative and cinematic that imbued their films with an artistry that may or may not have been for the genre at that stage of its development. Whether considering artis-

exceptional films early in a genre's evolution or the more self-reflexive films Jroauced during its la ter stages, it is difficult not to appreciate the formal and ideo­

flexibility of Hollywood's genres. These story formulas have articulated continually reexamined basic social issues, weaving a cultural tapestry whose

initial design became ever more detailed and ornate, ever more beautiful.